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CHICAGO, May 24 (UPI) — A Federal court jury convicted four Serbian nationalists late today on charges of plotting to kill Yugoslav diplomats in Chicago.

The four men, including the Rev. Stojilko Kajevic, a Serbian Orthodox priest and the alleged leader of a small terrorist group, were convicted of all conspiracy and bomb‐related charges issued in the nine‐count indictment.

In addition to Mr. Kajevic, the defendants included Nikola Kavaja of Patterson, N.J., Rados Stevlic of Wayne, Ill., and Nikola Zivovic of Chicago.

The Government charged in the fiveweek trial that Mr. Kajevic, a well known figure in the Chicago Serbian community, led a small band of terrorists opposed to the regime of Yugoslavian President Josip Broz Tito.

The men were indicted on charges that they bombed the Morton Grove, Ill., home of Sava Temer, a Yugoslavian diplomat, on Dec. 28, 1975, and conspired from June 1978 to Nov. 21, 1978 to bomb the Yugoslav Club in Chicago. No one was injured in the bombing.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla., May 24 (AP) —Despite a last‐minute lobbying campaign by White House aides and Gov. Bob Graham, the Florida Senate today again rejected the proposed equal rights amendment to the Constitution.

The measure was defeated for the fourth time in Florida on a 21‐to‐19 vote.

Supporters hailed the measure as an advance for human rights and, more pragmatically, as a way to end a costly convention boycott against Florida by the National Association for Women.

But opponents charged that the rights proposal, which would ban discrimination based on sex, was not needed and would transfer too many state powers to the Federal Government.

“We'll come back next session if we see there's a chance, but I think different people are going to have to be in the Senate,” said State Senator Jack Gordon of Miami Beach. “The people who are here now just aren't changeable.”

The proposal, which has been approved by 35 states, must be ratified by 38 by June 30, 1982, to become part of the Constitution.

Last of Jonestown Bodies Buried in California Grave

OAKLAND, Calif., May 24 (UPI) —With the quiet strains of a spiritual and a few words by ministers of eight faiths, the last 48 unidentified bodies from the People's Temple mission in Guyana were buried today in a common grave.

Most of the bodies were those of children.

The 48 were the last of the 913 persons who died last November in the mass suicides and murders at the Temple's remote jungle settlement, founded by the Rev. Jim Jones.

“This is their home — this is the place for them,” said Fred Lewis, adding that he was sure that some of the bodies in the grave were those of his relatives. His seven children, a sister and 19 other relatives were at the Jonestown mission. Only a third of them were among the identified dead.

Few persons attended the memorial service at Evergreen Cemetery. Most of the clergymen and others were from the black community of San Francisco, the district from which the Temple drew much of its membership.

Skylab Is Now Expected To Fall to Earth on July 2

WASHINGTON, May 24 (UPI) — The Air Force's latest estimate is that the abandoned Skylab space station will fall back to earth in the period June 20 to July 14, with July 2 the most likely date, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said today.

The revised prediction, given a 95 percent probability by the North American Air Defense Command, widens the gap of uncertainty by 11 days from the estimate provided a week ago.

The space agency, meanwhile, is planning to order the 78‐ton laboratory to change its attitude in orbit slightly. This maneuver is designed to keep Skylab stable in orbit in case it is decided to try to influence the time Skylab returns.

Some of Skylab's orbital tracks take it over more ocean areas than otheis. If it appears that Skylab might re‐enter while following a path over populated land areas, the space agency officials say, a maneuver to slow or speed up its demise might take it over more unpopulated areas.

Once it re‐enters the atmosphere, Skylab will disintegrate and NASA expects that 500 pieces will survive the heat of re‐entry and fall somewhere along a belt 4,000 miles long and 100 miles wide.

NASA said that the chances of any Skylab debris injuring someone were less than the chances of someone being injured by a falling meteorite.